Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Artist of the Day, March 29, 2022: Sonia Delaunay, an Ukrainian-born French artist (#1531)

Sonia Delaunay (1885 –1979) was a French artist born in Ukraine, who spent most of her working life in Paris. She formally trained in Russia and Germany before moving to France and expanding her practice to include textile, fashion, and set design. She co-founded the Orphism art movement, noted for its use of strong colours and geometric shapes, with her husband Robert Delaunay and others. She was the first living female artist to have a retrospective exhibition at the Louvre in 1964, and in 1975 was named an officer of the French Legion of Honor.

Sonia Delaunay's career spanned the European continent, allowing her to reap the riches of the exciting advances by many avant-garde art groups. Born and raised in Ukraine, she was educated in Germany and then France, making Paris her home just as modern art was finding a new way to find meaningful subject matter not dependent on realistic depictions of the world. Sonia was one of the primary propagators of Orphism (a movement founded by her husband Robert), a theory wedding color to form in order to achieve visual intensity on the surface of the canvas. Delaunay extended the visual exploration of this theory to a range of fields beyond painting, developing an entire career in textile design.

By matching primary and secondary colors (red with green, yellow with purple, and blue with orange) to create a kind of visual vibration, Robert Dulaunay developed a new type of expressive, abstract paintings. He called this exploration "Simultaneous Contrast," but the movement became officially known as Orphism and Sonia was one of its chief practitioners.

The Delaunay couple used Orphism to create non-objective imagery, the significance of which was based on the intensity of the expression that they could create with color on the surface of the canvas. They placed lines of primary color beside those of secondary color, understanding that the scientific effect on the eye of such combinations would result in art that could be just as scintillating to the viewer as those depicting a standard view of reality such as a figure reclining on a couch. Their efforts produced a body of work that forced the viewer to experience their pieces visually - yet powerfully.

Sonia Delaunay's exploration of expressive color in the field of textile design differentiates her significantly from other members of the contemporary avant-garde. Besides designing, making, and selling garments in her own fashion boutique, she was responsible for costume design in a range of the performing arts including theatre and dance. She ended up creating a line of textiles so significant that it was picked up by one of the biggest fabric manufacturers in Europe.
© 2022. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Sonia Delaunay, or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only 


 

Ms. Sonia Delaunay

 Portrait of Philomene, 1907

 Sleeping girl, 1907

 Prose of the Trans-Siberian and of Little Jehanne of France, 1913

 Simultaneous Dress, 1913

 Electric Prisms, 1914

 Costume Design for Cleopatra, 1918

 Wearing the Pierrot-Éclair costume, 1926
on the set of René Le Somptier’s film Le P’tit Parigot, 1926

 Composition 35, 1930

 Design in the style of Mondrian, 1931
possibly for a rug, from 'Compositions, Colours, Ideas'

Untitled, 1936 gouache (Illustration for Tristan Tzara's "Le fruit permis"

 La cible, 1936-37
Projet pour le palais des chemins de fer de l'exposition internationale de Paris 1937

Hélice, 1937, Décoration Pour Le Palais De L’Air,
Exposition Internationale Des Arts Et Des Techniques Dans La Vie Moderne

 Tableau De Bord, 1937 Décoration Pour Le Palais De L’Air,
Exposition Internationale Des Arts Et Des Techniques Dans La Vie Moderne

 Rythme couleur 1076, 1939

 Rhythme (Rhythm), 1945

 Rythme rouge et noir, 1945

 Colored Rhythm, 1946

 Untitled, 1956  gouache (Illustration for Tristan Tzara's "Le fruit permis")

 Untitled, 1957

 Illustration for Rythmes et Couleurs , 1966

 27 Tableaux Vivants, 1969

 Costume pour Carnaval de Rio, 1969

 Costumes, 1969

 Automne, 1970

 La Rochelle, 1970

 Love, 1970

Unknown title, 1970

 Les Illuminations, 1973

 Abstraction, 1979

King of Hearts

Venise

Wearable Art Project for Kids


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